Government enters shutdown as Congress passes midnight deadline

WASHINGTON — The U.S. federal government was due to start partially shutting down on Tuesday after lawmakers failed to compromise on an emergency spending bill before a midnight deadline.

Competing spending measures flew back and forth between the Republican-controlled House of Representatives and Democratic-led Senate late into Monday night, but Congress deadlocked over Republican efforts to use a temporary spending bill as a means to delay implementation of President Barack Obama’s landmark healthcare law.

It is unclear how long a government shutdown will last. The funding gap will leave some essential functions like national security intact but sharply cut many regulatory agencies, furloughing up to a million federal workers.

Earlier in the night, Obama, in a televised message, told U.S. troops that they will remain on “normal duty status” — and will still get paid — during the shutdown. Civilian employees of the defense department, however, face furloughs.